FILE ** President Theodore Roosevelt, is shown in an undated file photo. The Associated Press is asking 2008 presidential candidates a series of questions about their personal tastes, habits and backgrounds. When asked to name to name their favorite 20th century president from the opposing party, Democratic presidential candidates Hillary Rodham Clinton, John Edwards, Barack Obama, and Bill Richardson all chose President Theodore Roosevelt, the Republican who was the nation's 26th chief executive, 1901 to 1909.
** FILE * Theodore Roosevelt, is shown speaking when he stumped the country for William McKinley during the Presidential Campaign of 1900. Roosevelt was McKinley's running mate on the Republican ticket. Speaking loudly and carrying on like. It's a rare part of the 2008 presidential campaign rhetoric that crosses party lines. Democrats and Republicans alike are frequently invoking the words of the nation's 26th president and renowned political maverick.
In this file photo, pilots of a U.S. Navy F14 Tomcat move into position at dawn for launch from the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt Sunday, Oct. 28, 2001. At the U.N. Climate Conference Friday, April 4, 2008, some European nations are calling for tougher regulations of shipping and aviation emissions, saying they should be included in any new climate pact alongside pollutants from power plants and agriculture.
A small herd of elk roam the badlands inside Theodore Roosevelt National Park, near Medora, N.D., on Friday, Dec. 14, 2007. The number of elk roaming the nation's parks is booming, and that's bad news for them. A debate has started among wildlife and conservation officials about how the animals should be culled _ by sharpshooters' bullets or by their natural enemy, wolves.
Bill Whitworth, chief of resource management for Theodore Roosevelt National Park, uses binoculars to search for elk inside Theodore Roosevelt National Park near Medora, N.D., on Friday, Dec. 14, 2007. The number of elk roaming the nation's parks is booming, and that's bad news for them. A debate has started among wildlife and conservation officials about how the animals should be culled _ by sharpshooters' bullets or by their natural enemy, wolves.
New York Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly sits in his office under a painting of Theodore Roosevelt, the 26th U.S. President, during an interview, in New York, Tuesday Dec. 4 , 2007. Kelly chatted with ease about his law enforcement forefather, Theodore Roosevelt. Also about a new pet project, a "citizen satisfaction survey." And, of course, about a murder rate hitting historic lows. But when the subject turns to the buzz over whether he'll run for mayor, New York's top cop holsters his trademark crooked smile and cuts off the conversation with a polite, auto-pilot response. Heading the 36,000-officer New York Police Department, he insisted, consumes him.